Restless, BBC One

For all its ominous music, William Boyd's adaptation of his World War II espionage novel failed to convince

William Boyd wrote the screenplay for this adaptation of his 2006 espionage novel, and since it’s integral to the whole he retained its two-part structure. The first concerns the World War II activities of former British intelligence spy Eva Delectorskaya, the second, set in 1976, concerns her efforts to lay the past to rest. Not only has the past cast a dark shadow over her life but it continues to endanger it. For this she enlists the help of her daughter.

CD of the Year: Tiger Cats - Isle of Dogs

Isle of Dogs is a grower in the way Jack's beanstalk was a grower

How does one choose just one favourite album of the year? Should it be the one that knocked you for six on a first hearing, the one that you admired rather than loved but nevertheless admired an awful lot, or the one that  sneaked up on you gradually so that eventually you found yourself putting it on over and over again, even when you’d set out to play something else entirely, until eventually you ended up playing it more than any other album in 2012? Well, needless to say I’ve gone for the last.

DVD: Searching for Sugar Man

Extraordinarily unlikely musical tale inspires and boggles

Thanks first to a David Holmes cover version then to some recent reissues of his records, I knew the approximate story of Detroit singer-songwriter Sixto Rodriguez. Roughly speaking: intelligent but borderline down-and-out Detroit musician is discovered, makes two amazing albums in the early 1970s, fails to sell anything, and turns his back on the industry to find steady work and raise a family.

Lives in Music #1: Rod the Autobiography

LIVES IN MUSIC #1: ROD THE AUTOBIOGRAPHY In which we introduce a series on the year's best music memoirs with a heroic tale of Rabelaisian excess

In which we introduce a series on the year's best music memoirs with a heroic tale of Rabelaisian excess

What makes a good rock biography? Sex, naturally. Drugs, frequently. Rock’n’roll, obviously. None of the above are in short supply in Rod Stewart’s account of a long life spent howling into microphones and knocking up blondes. He came, he snorted, he conquered across four decades, in a variety of outfits from tartan to spandex, from the Eel Pie Island to Vegas. And the way he delivers it, this tall tale of wine, women and song has the flavour of a splendid lock-in down the boozer.

Kris Kristofferson, Royal Festival Hall

KRIS KRISTOFFERSON, ROYAL FESTIVAL HALL The silver-tongued devil transfixes his audience

The silver-tongued devil transfixes his audience

From being disowned by his family to writing the ultimate hangover lament, Kris Kristofferson has, partly, led the life of a country song. The other part, however, has included a Rhodes scholarship to Oxford, an illustrious movie career and dating Barbara Streisand. In 1971 he famously sang about being “partly truth and partly fiction - a walking contradiction”. Now, at 76, the Texan’s clever lines enjoy a lower profile. Still, this year’s Feeling Mortal has won widespread praise.

Glasvegas, Garage

GLASVEGAS, GARAGE Sentimental Scots gets into a sweat with some short, sharp rock

Sentimental Scots gets into a sweat with some short, sharp rock

Before Glasvegas took off James Allan played professional football in Scotland. He did not quite make the highest echelon in his soccer career and after a blistering start, when his band was championed as the Next Great Guitar Group, things haven't been looking too hopeful in his music career either. Glasvegas was dropped by Columbia Records after their second album, and when I heard they were playing this small club in the run-up to the 2013 release of their third album, Later...When The TV Turns To Static, I wondered if maybe their record label had a point.

Rodriguez, Usher Hall, Edinburgh

RODRIGUEZ, USHER HALL, EDINBURGH The spirit of Sugar Man finally wins through on a night of occasional brilliance

The spirit of Sugar Man finally wins through on a night of occasional brilliance

We surely all know the story of Sixto Rodriguez by now. The Detroit-born singer-songwriter made two fine albums in the early 1970s, Cold Fact and Coming from Reality, before swiftly vanishing. As he descended into obscurity his music slowly rose to find its audience, most notably in South Africa, where he became a star in absentia and a blank canvas upon which numerous outlandish myths could be projected: he was in jail for murder; he was a heroin addict; he was dead; he had committed suicide on stage.